Windows: Even if you’re the world’s biggest Microsoft fan, you have to admit that Apple’s “Quick Look” feature for macOS is pretty convenient. If you’re such a purist that you haven’t even touched a Mac in the last decade or so, here’s a brief introduction: You click on a file. You press the space bar. A preview of the item pops up—like a photograph, the contents of a PDF, etc. It’s a great way to take, well, a quick peek at something without wasting time loading an actual app.

Windows 10, unfortunately, has no such trick built into the operating system. However, one quick download from the Windows Store, and you’ll be previewing (most) files just like your Mac friends.

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The Windows app, cleverly titled “QuickLook,” is completely free. Install it, run it, and you’ll be able to preview “certain file types”—the developer doesn’t specify—by highlighting them in File Explorer and hitting the spacebar to open up a preview. (Don’t hold it down; tap it.) And tap spacebar one more time to close the preview. It’s as easy as that. The app automatically sets itself to launch every time you start Windows, a necessity for its primary feature to work.

Screenshot: David Murphy

Once QuickLook is open, you can also pin the window on top of everything else, and clicking on any other files will automatically pull up a preview. It’s super-convenient if you have a bunch of files you want to peek through.